Deleted User wrote: » The funny part is the irony of you first dismissing the points made in the thread, and then, repeating back to us, many of the points I have repeatedly made throughout the thread. So, yeah.. definitely funny.
Deleted User wrote: » Ahh, you placed yourself in that corner when you set the limitation.. your own words.. and you're deflecting.
Deleted User wrote: » Why the need for a citation? Educational qualifications in 3rd world nations are significantly lower in quality (due to lack of funding, lecturers/teachers being shared between majors, a contract approach for teachers, etc), and reliability (due to corruption, bribing of officials for better results, and the faking of degrees). I have previously on two different occasions, linked a variety of reports from Africa, and the M.East relating to this. And as someone who lectures in Asia, I can say, the same is reflected in many Asian countries which are poor, or emerging from poverty.
Deleted User wrote: » So, you're feeling the need for a few rounds of wrangling.. Nah. Been there, done that, hoping for something better.
Deleted User wrote: » The numbers of hospital related employment (many of whom are on limited contracts and don't stay long-term) vs actual immigration is tiny. Once again, though, very few, if anyone, has any issue with people who come here with the skills/education to be properly employed, and not needing State supports.
Deleted User wrote: » Ok... so, we're back to mixing immigrants into a broad selection so we can use migrants from comparable (western) nations to validate the overall benefits of multiculturalism? I thought you'd read many of the posts to the thread, and had an understanding of the objections of the posters here. Talk about being disingenuous. Read the comment again I was responding to your question on mixing with other cultures and my own experience of that. Immigrants are from a vast array of countries (as you would expect) why are the french off limits in my response to mixing with other cultures? Let's lay it out a little, since you seem to be willfully missing the primary points.
Deleted User wrote: » Nobody has any issue with EU migrants who have the skills/education to be gainfully employed, without needing State supports. ie. people for whom there are jobs, and don't need welfare until jobs become available. Also.. jobs which can provide an income to live decently without governmental supplements. Few people have any issues with people from non-EU countries who have adequate skills/education to be employed.. bla bla bla (same as above). In terms of integration, most posters would like to see a greater emphasis on western or comparative cultures (Eastern Europe) as they tend to integrate more easily, due to shared values and history of social development. Whereas people from the M.East or Africa are suspect because there isn't a comparative culture, nor are the values shared, therefore integration is highly questionable. With Asians, integration isn't an issue since they tend to do very well for themselves professionally or in private business, and don't cause many problems. And since minorities tend to congregate together to form groups, actual interaction between them and natives is rather limited, except for certain points of intersection such as work, sports, and schooling (kids).. but in each of those cases, again, the actual degree of interaction is extremely limited, especially where their own cultures/religions limit such interactions. I could go on, but I suspect there's little point since your response so far has completely skipped over what posters have contributed and instead repeated the tired comments of past pro-multiculturalism posters.. I'm not trying to dismiss you, but you're not giving me much to work with here. You came on to the thread, calling it an echo chamber, and suggesting that you could present a viable alternative... Grand. Wonderful. However. you haven't. Instead, you've regurgitated many of the points previously discussed (and what's contributed to any kind of echo chamber). So... what is it you're going to argue about multiculturalism, bearing in mind, the points made by posters here?
Bambi wrote: » And its a good job you did, otherwise people might not have noticed the Nazi connotation of the phrase "Das Reich" :rolleyes:
Zookey123 wrote: » I have discussed all of the above. EU migrants are still migrants with different cultures and thus multiculturalism. Vast majority of skilled health workers are non-eu with different ethnic and cultural backgrounds and are vital for this countries survival thus multiculturalism (but for some reason I cant mention them because you are okay with them being here even though they are of a different culture). I am getting a bit tired its late so I am sure I have made some typos. Anyways I dont dismiss your points I have provided counter arguments.
Wibbs wrote: » Very much on the surface though Kay. It's mostly flim flam, though much of the diversity politic is. First and foremost America is a White, European, Christian(mostly Protestant) nation squarely built on the idea of that. If you match up to that list or can pass for it you can blend in. If you don't then not nearly so much melting pot for you. Their oft quoted constitution states that "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal" unless you were a slave, woman or native of course. Now things have most certainly much improved and much of it on the back of that statement carried to its logical conclusion(which IIRC Jefferson hoped for regarding slavery), but your average Black American is well down the pecking order compared to your average White centuries on.
Zookey123 wrote: » EMM, we were discussing skills and experience not a universities QS ranking. BTW even though most of the faking degrees scams are from countries like India a lot of the users are from first world countries. As for skilled immigrants being important: Honestly I could say the same. So would you be ok with multiculturalism if all the immigrants from these different ethnic and cultural background were skilled? is that the general consensus here because i didn't get that feeling.
Again this thread is about multiculturalism not people on state supports. Would you be okay with multiculturalism if only skilled workers came here? And were are you getting this info on temp contracts from?
Oh am I?
I have discussed all of the above. EU migrants are still migrants with different cultures and thus multiculturalism. Vast majority of skilled health workers are non-eu with different ethnic and cultural backgrounds and are vital for this countries survival thus multiculturalism (but for some reason I cant mention them because you are okay with them being here even though they are of a different culture). I am getting a bit tired its late so I am sure I have made some typos. Anyways I dont dismiss your points I have provided counter arguments.
Zookey123 wrote: » Yup.
Japan is not as mono-cultural as you might think. I was there recently and it is booming with Europeans now. They have English everywhere even the local fruit vendors could speak basic English.
Quite a few actually since I work in health care. Many of our doctors, nurses, cleaning staff, IT are Muslim ladies. I have spent some time abroad but most of my interactions with people of different cultures happens daily in the hospital as it does for most people working in healthcare.
This only occurs because it is allowed to occur. If you introduce things like faith schools (Muslim only schools) and ethnic minority ghettos where each minority gets their own area they wont integrate because they are being allowed not to. I read a story recently about a young asian male (20s) in england born and bred who couldn't speak the language. That can't be allowed to happen. This creates social divides and sparks racial tension.
zom wrote: » Multiculturalism in Ireland - my culture is better than yours?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RP_QpU1ooek (Pocahontas and John Smith Talk #uncivilised)
ExMachina1000 wrote: » https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/immigrant-children-born-in-ireland-5276579-Nov2020/ The journal are also contributing to the overturning of referendum by publishing yet another piece of garbage "opinion piece" by some Labour nobody
Me. Previously. Elsewhere. wrote: » But if the political PR is anything to go by in the past and there is enough support among the more mainstream parties, the usual MO will be the release of a load of appeals to feels sob stories featuring kids and with slanted polls over the next while. To get people used to the notion of a repeal of this and make them think it was their idea. No conspiracy required either. I've personally dealt with a fair few advertising and marketing agencies in my time, including ones who deal with politicians and parties. it's a tried and tested method and not just for politics, other business interests do similar. EG the motor industry will get stories out like "Older cars are deathtraps" to boost sales. Not sponsored by SIMI I swear. It works on the fact that people's memories are generally short, they generally don't think too deeply about stuff that doesn't directly affect them today and they respond more emotionally than logically most of the time and emotional memories are more dug in and rarely questioned.
Where she gets a margin of 58% is beyond me
Cordell wrote: » 79-21 Why does she do that? Because 80% would mean she's speaking against the will of the vast majority of people.
Cordell wrote: » Repeal the 8th passed with a margin of 33% - this won't work for her but it may work for the other side
biko wrote: » Ivana Bacik thinks 80% of Irish are xenophobic because they voted to revoke Jus Soli 2004. No wonder they call her "Labour's queen of political correctness". Another politician try to bully her way by branding regular people racists. I wonder where Ivana's loyalties lie. Not with the Irish anyway. She fails the prime directive for a politician, the welfare of her constituents.
Her term as president of Trinity College Dublin Students' Union ended prematurely when she resigned in 1990, after it was discovered that she had broken a mandate received from the Union membership, regarding voting for candidates at a Union of Students in Ireland conference.[7] Despite 13 TCD representatives being mandated to vote for one candidate, Martin Whelan, a former TCD SU president, it transpired that candidate received only 12 votes, Bacik's vote instead being given to the feminist former UCD SU officer, Karen Quinlivan. A controversy erupted in the Students' Union and a subsequent internal investigation led to Bacik's resignation
Yellow_Fern wrote: » It is not alright if the only people resisting this are the National Party, that will taint opposition immensely. The Freedom Party have decent people but also have a bad reputation.
biko wrote: » Once we leave the EU
Wibbs wrote: » No ghettoisation? You're restricting the movements of people along ethnic lines. I'm sorry Mr Aziz, I'm afraid you can't buy a house on the South Circular Road as we have records that show there are too many Muslims already in the area, so we're selling the house to Mrs O'Malley. By law. And you would have to legislate for this. Yeah... No. Hardly progressive or reflective of a free society and completely and utterly unworkable. The only way a society can avoid ghettoisation along ethnic lines is to have such small numbers that no critical mass of one group or another is reached. We're already past that point in urban Ireland, well Dublin.
seenitall wrote: » The Danes are trying it:https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=26414&LangID=E The UN is not happy!
biko wrote: » Once we leave the EU these politicians will soften their tone when they can't progress from national assembly to federal assembly. A socialist politician have more in common with socialist politicians from other countries then they do with their own countrymen.
Wibbs wrote: » How do you stop it? By not letting too many non natives into a country in the first place. Especially those who look and act most differently to the local population. Them's the facts, uncomfortable as they may be, but history current and past shows these facts. Too late for the Danes and the French and the Germans and the Swedes and the British and we're on the slippery slope here in Ireland unless we act now to curtail any more non EU, non Western immigration. How many clear examples of how badly this nonsense goes do we need before we cry nope, go away with this empty busted flush of a social experiment. .
Wibbs wrote: » Yeah that really wouldn't suit and no way would she be calling for a revisit, or worse ignore it and undemocratically reverse it by way of legislation. Same for any vote she happened to agree with.